Val Verde Unified School District
Encyclopedia
The Val Verde Unified School District is one of two public education governing bodies in Moreno Valley, California
Moreno Valley, California
Moreno Valley is a city located in Riverside County, California.A relatively young city, its rapid growth in the 1980s and the first decade of the 21st century made it second-largest city in Riverside County by population, and one of the Inland Empire's population centers. As of the 2010 census,...

 which stretches into Perris, California
Perris, California
Perris is a city in Riverside County, California, USA. At the 2010 census, the city population was 68,386, up from 36,189 at the 2000 census. The city is named in honor of Fred T. Perris, chief engineer of the California Southern Railroad...

. It currently operates 23 schools and is the neighbor to its larger counterpart, the Moreno Valley Unified School District
Moreno Valley Unified School District
-Mission statement:Moreno Valley Unified School District's mission is to prepare all students academically and socially to become productive members of society.-Elementary:*Armada*Bear Valley*Box Springs*Butterfield*Chaparral Hills*Cloverdale*Creekside...

.

In 2007, Val Verde Unified School District was brought under question by the State of California for the misuse of state funds and failure to report independent funding.

Preschools


currently closed

Elementary Schools



Middle Schools


High Schools

  • Citrus Hill High School
    Citrus Hill High School
    Citrus Hill High School is a secondary public co-ed school serving students of Moreno Valley, Perris and Riverside in the Val Verde Unified School District.-History:Citrus Hill High School opened on August 18, 2005 with 651 enrollees grades 9-10...

  • Rancho Verde High School
    Rancho Verde High School
    Rancho Verde High School is one of two comprehensive high schools in the Val Verde UnifiedSchool District. The school is situated on 38 acres in the southern section of Moreno Valley, California. Rancho Verde represents a community of diverse social and economic backgroundscontaining both suburban...

  • Student Success Academy
  • Val Verde High School
    Val Verde High School
    Val Verde High School is a "continuation" high school for troubled teens located in Perris, California, USA. Most of its students come from the neighboring Rancho Verde High School because of lack of credits, disciplinary problems, or teenage pregnancy...


School Board

  • Dr. Alan Jensen - Superintendent
  • Marla Kirkland - Vice President
  • Stacey Guzman - Clerk
  • Wraymond Sawyerr - President
  • Fredy R. De Leon - Member
  • Shelly Yarbrough - Member

Val Verde Unified GATE Advisory Members

  • Victoria Grehn, Site Facilitator
  • Michelle Salmon, Parent
  • Renonah McGee, Parent
  • Sarah Peterson, Site Facilitator
  • Wendy Pospichal, Principal
  • Davina Schoulten, Site Facilitator
  • Sandra Wilkerson, Parent
  • Valerie Solorio, Parent
  • Bill Thompson, District Coordinator

Bankruptcy risk

VVUSD claimed that they used $53 million for construction and equipment. The large amounts of money spent on these amenities could lead them to possible bankruptcy. http://www.pe.com/localnews/inland/stories/PE_News_Local_D_valverde24.3ed4eee.html Citrus Hill High School, the newest and most bustling high school, has been on the receiving end for many of said amenities, such as a football field with artificial turf.

Legal Battle vs. The State of California

An investigation on VVUSD school funding began when audits performed by the Office of Public School Construction (OPSC) found inconsistentcies in financial aid papers filed by Val Verde administrators. A top official at the state’s Office of Public School Construction said her office was looking into whether there were any "material inaccuracies" or false certifications in the paperwork the Perris-area district submitted in recent years to get financial aid to build its schools. http://capoliticalnews.com/s/spip.php?breve2451

Further investigations by OPSC found that VVUSD had recklessly spent state funds on the purchasing of unneeded amenities, such as: large weight rooms, artificial turf, locker room whirlpools, helicopter pads, and elaborate sports arenas.

The Val Verde Unified School District has been a financial hardship district since the beginning of the School Facilities Program. In the last review of their financial hardship status renewal, OPSC indicated that the district had approximately $90 million available in COPs to contribute towards their next projects.

The District filed an appeal to the SAB, arguing that the funds were not available because the grants were inadequate and they were forced to pass COPs to complete and improve previously approved financial hardship projects http://www.cccoe.k12.ca.us/supe/leg_updates/2007/SABreport_7_25_07.pdf. On July 25, 2007, the State Allocation Board ruled against Val Verde Unified with a vote of 9-0. The board further ruled that VVUSD must repay the State for past-funding and that they'll no longer be able to self-certify their projects.

Further Appeals against The State of California

Val Verde Unified School District stumbled in its lawsuit against state officials over school construction funding, when a Riverside County judge rejected the district's request for a court order against the state on February 29, 2008. Spencer Covert, an attorney for the district argued that school construction money, given by the state to districts in financial hardship, isn't enough to build complete schools, and that districts such as Val Verde shouldn't be punished for borrowing money to cover shortfalls in state funds http://www.pe.com/localnews/riversidearea/schools/stories/PE_News_Local_S_valverde01.42e4558.html.

But Covert failed to sway County Judge Edward D. Webster. The judge tore into the district's claim that state agencies that disbursed the $340 million had discriminated against Val Verde by depriving its students of enough money to house them in adequate schools.

"I saw absolutely nothing in your material to suggest that the Val Verde school district was treated any differently than any other school district," Webster said. "... As I went through this I'm saying to myself, 'We're wasting attorney fee monies that could be spent on educating the kids here,' and I thought to myself, this is ridiculous."

As a hardship district, Val Verde has received $340 million in state school construction money since 1999—the second biggest infusion of state cash among all California school districts. It was supposed to cover 100 percent of construction costs but wasn't enough, the district argued.

The fact that Val Verde got a third of a billion dollars from the state to build or upgrade campuses was not lost on Webster, who remarked that this was not "ungenerous."

External links

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